Abstract

Here we present the results of the study of two Lower Toarcian carbonate sections located in the Iberian Range of central Spain. Analyses of stable isotope on belemnite calcite allowed calculation of seawater palaeotemperature variations, which were compared with the stratigraphical distribution of ostracods. These organisms are particularly sensitive to ratios of temperature and salinity variations and hence are good indicators of climate changes. From a cooling interval, with seawater temperatures of 13.2 °C recorded at the Pliensbachian−Toarcian transition, seawater temperature began to rise in the lowermost Toarcian Tenuicostatum Zone, reaching average temperatures between 14.6 °C and 16.3 °C during the time of deposition of this Zone. Coinciding with this seawater warming, up to 85% of the ostracods species progressively disappeared during a period of approximately 300 kyr, marking the extinction interval. The extinction boundary, located around the Tenuicostatum−Serpentinum zonal boundary, coincides with a marked increase in temperature in the Serpentinum Zone, on which average seawater temperatures of 22 °C have been calculated. Warming continued through part of the Middle Toarcian Bifrons Zone, reaching average temperatures of 24.7 °C. Readjustment of the ostracod population allowed recovery of these faunas in the upper Serpentinum Zone, although the extinction of a major ostracod group, the healdioids, was also recorded. The correlation between mass extinction and warming infers a causal relationship. Comparison of the results with the records of stable isotopes in belemnites and in bulk carbonates, as well as TOC and facies analysis suggests that the anoxia linked to the Early Toarcian oceanic anoxic event was not the main responsible for the ostracod mass extinction.

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